Small Town News

Local Government

Family planning saves taxpayers

Lyon County Reporter of Rock Rapids, Iowa

- Advertisement -

Each taxpayer dollar invested in programs and clinics that help women prevent unintended pregnancies saves taxpayers an average of almost $4 in the first year of an avoided pregnancy and more than $ 15 over five years, according to a benefit-cost analysis conducted for the Iowa Initiative to Reduce Unintended Pregnancies.

"Approximately one-half of the 52,000 women who will become pregnant in Iowa this year will become pregnant unintentionally," says Christie Vilsack, executive director of the Iowa Initiative. "Helping low-income or uninsured women to avoid unintended pregnancy can save taxpayers thousands of dollars in healthcare costs, food assistance, and child care assistance for women, infants and children."

The study, the first since 1992 to examine the costs versus benefits of family planning services in Iowa, found that every $1 spent for family planning averts $3.78 in public expenditures for health care, child care and welfare over a one-year period. Over five years, those savings grow to $15.12 for every' family planning dollar spent. Services to 14 - to-19-year-olds can save more than $17 over five years for every family planning dollar.

The study is available online at the University of Iowa's Public Policy Center.

"The economic impact is even greater when you consider that many women attain higher levels of education and better paying jobs when they are able to plan their pregnancies," Vilsack adds.

More than 170,000 Iowa women and teenage girls qualify for publicly funded contraceptive services; however, only 41 percent of them are served by family planning clinics.

The Guttmacher Institute estimates the 72 clinics operating in 49 Iowa counties help women avoid as many as 16,000 unintended pregnancies annually; yet the state ranks 48th nationally in the availability of family planning services.

Eligible patients at the clinics can obtain routine gynecological examinations, conventional birth control products as well as long-acting, reversible contraceptives that are up to 99 percent effective and can prevent pregnancies for three to 10 years.

The Iowa Initiative aims to reduce the high rate of unintended pregnancies among Iowa women ages 18-30 through networking, research and public outreach. The Iowa Initiative is part of a network of women's health organizations around the state working together to increase access to birth control options and family planning information.



Copyright 2010 Lyon County Reporter, Rock Rapids, Iowa. All Rights Reserved. This content, including derivations, may not be stored or distributed in any manner, disseminated, published, broadcast, rewritten or reproduced without express, written consent from SmallTownPapers, Inc.

© 2010 Lyon County Reporter Rock Rapids, Iowa. All Rights Reserved. This content, including derivations, may not be stored or distributed in any manner, disseminated, published, broadcast, rewritten or reproduced without express, written consent from DAS.

Original Publication Date: March 31, 2010



More from Lyon County Reporter